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Dissociable Modulation of Overt Visual Attention in Valence and Arousal Revealed by Topology of Scan Path

Emotional stimuli have evolutionary significance for the survival of organisms; therefore, they are attention-grabbing and are processed preferentially. The neural underpinnings of two principle emotional dimensions in affective space, valence (degree of pleasantness) and arousal (intensity of evoke...

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Autores principales: Ni, Jianguang, Jiang, Huihui, Jin, Yixiang, Chen, Nanhui, Wang, Jianhong, Wang, Zhengbo, Luo, Yuejia, Ma, Yuanye, Hu, Xintian
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3071806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21494331
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018262
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author Ni, Jianguang
Jiang, Huihui
Jin, Yixiang
Chen, Nanhui
Wang, Jianhong
Wang, Zhengbo
Luo, Yuejia
Ma, Yuanye
Hu, Xintian
author_facet Ni, Jianguang
Jiang, Huihui
Jin, Yixiang
Chen, Nanhui
Wang, Jianhong
Wang, Zhengbo
Luo, Yuejia
Ma, Yuanye
Hu, Xintian
author_sort Ni, Jianguang
collection PubMed
description Emotional stimuli have evolutionary significance for the survival of organisms; therefore, they are attention-grabbing and are processed preferentially. The neural underpinnings of two principle emotional dimensions in affective space, valence (degree of pleasantness) and arousal (intensity of evoked emotion), have been shown to be dissociable in the olfactory, gustatory and memory systems. However, the separable roles of valence and arousal in scene perception are poorly understood. In this study, we asked how these two emotional dimensions modulate overt visual attention. Twenty-two healthy volunteers freely viewed images from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS) that were graded for affective levels of valence and arousal (high, medium, and low). Subjects' heads were immobilized and eye movements were recorded by camera to track overt shifts of visual attention. Algebraic graph-based approaches were introduced to model scan paths as weighted undirected path graphs, generating global topology metrics that characterize the algebraic connectivity of scan paths. Our data suggest that human subjects show different scanning patterns to stimuli with different affective ratings. Valence salient stimuli (with neutral arousal) elicited faster and larger shifts of attention, while arousal salient stimuli (with neutral valence) elicited local scanning, dense attention allocation and deep processing. Furthermore, our model revealed that the modulatory effect of valence was linearly related to the valence level, whereas the relation between the modulatory effect and the level of arousal was nonlinear. Hence, visual attention seems to be modulated by mechanisms that are separate for valence and arousal.
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spelling pubmed-30718062011-04-14 Dissociable Modulation of Overt Visual Attention in Valence and Arousal Revealed by Topology of Scan Path Ni, Jianguang Jiang, Huihui Jin, Yixiang Chen, Nanhui Wang, Jianhong Wang, Zhengbo Luo, Yuejia Ma, Yuanye Hu, Xintian PLoS One Research Article Emotional stimuli have evolutionary significance for the survival of organisms; therefore, they are attention-grabbing and are processed preferentially. The neural underpinnings of two principle emotional dimensions in affective space, valence (degree of pleasantness) and arousal (intensity of evoked emotion), have been shown to be dissociable in the olfactory, gustatory and memory systems. However, the separable roles of valence and arousal in scene perception are poorly understood. In this study, we asked how these two emotional dimensions modulate overt visual attention. Twenty-two healthy volunteers freely viewed images from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS) that were graded for affective levels of valence and arousal (high, medium, and low). Subjects' heads were immobilized and eye movements were recorded by camera to track overt shifts of visual attention. Algebraic graph-based approaches were introduced to model scan paths as weighted undirected path graphs, generating global topology metrics that characterize the algebraic connectivity of scan paths. Our data suggest that human subjects show different scanning patterns to stimuli with different affective ratings. Valence salient stimuli (with neutral arousal) elicited faster and larger shifts of attention, while arousal salient stimuli (with neutral valence) elicited local scanning, dense attention allocation and deep processing. Furthermore, our model revealed that the modulatory effect of valence was linearly related to the valence level, whereas the relation between the modulatory effect and the level of arousal was nonlinear. Hence, visual attention seems to be modulated by mechanisms that are separate for valence and arousal. Public Library of Science 2011-04-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3071806/ /pubmed/21494331 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018262 Text en Ni et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ni, Jianguang
Jiang, Huihui
Jin, Yixiang
Chen, Nanhui
Wang, Jianhong
Wang, Zhengbo
Luo, Yuejia
Ma, Yuanye
Hu, Xintian
Dissociable Modulation of Overt Visual Attention in Valence and Arousal Revealed by Topology of Scan Path
title Dissociable Modulation of Overt Visual Attention in Valence and Arousal Revealed by Topology of Scan Path
title_full Dissociable Modulation of Overt Visual Attention in Valence and Arousal Revealed by Topology of Scan Path
title_fullStr Dissociable Modulation of Overt Visual Attention in Valence and Arousal Revealed by Topology of Scan Path
title_full_unstemmed Dissociable Modulation of Overt Visual Attention in Valence and Arousal Revealed by Topology of Scan Path
title_short Dissociable Modulation of Overt Visual Attention in Valence and Arousal Revealed by Topology of Scan Path
title_sort dissociable modulation of overt visual attention in valence and arousal revealed by topology of scan path
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3071806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21494331
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018262
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